Friday, October 18, 2013

U.S. Congress ends default threat, Obama signs debt bill


By Richard Cowan and David Lawder


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress on Wednesday approved an 11th-hour deal to end a partial government shutdown and pull the world's biggest economy back from the brink of a historic debt default that could have threatened financial calamity.


Capping weeks of political brinkmanship that had unnerved global markets, President Barack Obama quickly signed the spending measure, which passed the Senate and House of Representatives after Republicans dropped efforts to use the legislation to force changes in his signature healthcare law.


The White House budget office told hundreds of thousands of federal workers, the bulk of whom had been idle for the past 16 days, to be ready to return to work on Thursday.


The down-to-the-wire deal, however, offers only a temporary fix and does not resolve the fundamental issues of spending and deficits that divide Republicans and Democrats. It funds the government until January 15 and raises the debt ceiling until February 7, so Americans face the possibility of another bitter budget fight and another government shutdown early next year.


With the deadlock broken just a day before the U.S. Treasury said it would exhaust its ability to borrow new funds, U.S. stocks surged on Wednesday, nearing an all-time high. Share markets in Asia also cheered the deal.


Taking the podium in the White House briefing room on Wednesday night, Obama said that with final congressional passage, "We can begin to lift this cloud of uncertainty and unease from our businesses and from the American people."


"Hopefully next time it won't be in the 11th hour. We've got to get out of the habit of governing by crisis," Obama said. He outmaneuvered Republicans by holding firm in defense of "Obamacare" to win agreement, with few strings attached, to end the 16-day shutdown.


World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said "the global economy dodged a potential catastrophe" with congressional approval of the deal to raise the $16.7 trillion U.S. debt ceiling.


The standoff between Republicans and the White House over funding the government forced the temporary lay-off of hundreds of thousands of federal workers from October 1 and created concern that crisis-driven politics was the "new normal" in Washington.


While essential functions like defense and air traffic control continued during the crisis, national parks and agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency have been largely closed.


Senator John McCain, whose fellow Republicans triggered the crisis with demands that the Democratic president's "Obamacare" healthcare reform law be defunded, said earlier on Wednesday the deal marked the "end of an agonizing odyssey" for Americans.


"It is one of the most shameful chapters I have seen in the years I've spent in the Senate," said McCain, who had warned Republicans not to link their demands for Obamacare changes to the debt limit or government spending bill. Polls showed Republicans took a hit in public opinion over the standoff.


In the end, the Democratic-led Senate overwhelmingly passed the measure on a 81-18 vote, and the Republican-controlled House followed suit 285 to 144. Obama signed the 35-page bill just after midnight.


POLITICAL DYSFUNCTION


Although the deal would only extend U.S. borrowing authority until the first week of February, the Treasury Department would have tools to temporarily extend its borrowing capacity beyond that date if Congress failed to act early next year. But such techniques eventually run out.


In addition to lifting the federal debt limit, the deal calls for creating a House-Senate bipartisan commission to try to come up with long-term deficit-reduction ideas that would have to be approved by the full Congress. Their work would have to be completed by December 13, but some lawmakers say the panel faces an extremely difficult task.


The agreement also includes some income verification procedures for those seeking subsidies under the 2010 healthcare law. But it was only a modest concession to Republicans, who surrendered on their latest attempt to delay or gut the healthcare package or include major changes, including the elimination of a medical device tax.


The congressional vote signaled a temporary ceasefire between Republicans and the White House in the latest struggle over spending and deficits that has at times paralyzed both decision-making and basic functions of government.


The political dysfunction has worried U.S. allies and creditors such as China, the biggest foreign holder of U.S. debt, and raised questions about the impact on America's prestige. The Treasury has said it risks hurting the country's reputation as a safe haven and stable financial center.


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican leader Mitch McConnell announced the fiscal agreement on the Senate floor earlier on Wednesday, and its passage was eased when the main Republican critic of the deal, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, said he would not use procedural moves to delay a vote.


The agreement stacked up as a political achievement for Obama, who refused to negotiate on changes to the healthcare law, and a defeat for Republicans, who were driven by Tea Party conservatives in their ranks and suffered a backlash in public opinion polls.


There was no immediate sign that House Speaker John Boehner's leadership position was at risk despite having conceded defeat in the budget battle.


Several Republican lawmakers suggested he may have strengthened his standing among the rank-and-file, who gave him a standing ovation at an afternoon meeting.


But Cruz, a Tea Party-backed senator with 2016 presidential aspirations, denounced the fiscal accord as a "terrible deal" and accused fellow Republicans of giving in too easily in their bid to derail Obamacare.


Obama's Democrats avoided claims of victory. "The bottom line is, millions suffered, millions didn't get pay checks, the economy was dragged down," said Senator Charles Schumer. "This is not a happy day, it is a somber day."


The fight over Obamacare rapidly grew into a brawl over the debt ceiling, threatening a default that global financial organizations warned could throw the United States back into recession and cause a global economic disaster.


Fitch Ratings had warned on Tuesday that it could cut the U.S. sovereign credit rating from AAA, citing the political brinkmanship over raising the debt ceiling.


A resolution to the crisis cannot come soon enough for many companies. American consumers have put away their wallets, at least temporarily, instead of spending on big-ticket items like cars and recreational vehicles.


"We're sort of 'crises-ed' out," said Tammy Darvish, vice president of DARCARS Automotive Group, a family-run company that owns 21 auto dealerships in the greater Washington area.


(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro, Steve Holland, Roberta Rampton and Mark Felsenthal, Amanda Becker, Patricia Zengerle, Susan Heavey, David Lawder and Jason Lange; Writing by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Grant McCool and Tim Dobbyn)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senate-passes-bill-avoid-default-reopen-government-000958311--sector.html
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World War R: New Comic Pits Archie And Friends Against The Undead





Cover of Afterlife with Archie #1.



Archie Comics

Ready for your fair share of Halloween shakes and shivers, kiddies? Look no further than Afterlife with Archie, a new ongoing comic series that melds our eternal fascination with all things zombie apocalypse and one of the most enduring and successful comic icons of all time, Archie Andrews — and yes, it is actually scary.


That's right, the perma-teenagers in happy-go-lucky Riverdale find their comforting and idealized existence invaded by ... undead hordes. Can these archetypal clean-cut kids survive? Here's the setup:


Reggie Mantle runs over Jughead's fluffy pup Hot Dog. (Of course Reggie started it!) Jughead takes Hot Dog to Sabrina the teen witch, who using the Necronomicon and channeling Pet Sematary, brings him back to life. (And messes it up, 'cause that's what she does!) Hot Dog bites Jughead, who ends up consuming victims at the Halloween Dance. (He is always hungry!)


Meanwhile sexy nurse Betty and even more sexy Vampirella — or "Vampironica," as Betty calls her, after Veronica calls Betty "Florence Nightinghag" — are too busy sniping at each other over costume choices to notice. (Naturally!)


What follows is a five-story arc called "Escape from Riverdale" that will see the surviving members of the gang leave home for the first time in 72 years. Terrific pop-culture horror references (or reverences) in dialogue and art are on every page, plus a dark humor that conjures classic Tales from the Crypt.


This new macabre monthly masterpiece is penned by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, who cut his teeth on horror fare and Archie comics. You might know him as the writer of the upcoming Carrie remake, or for his comic adaptation of Stephen King's The Stand. Less well known — but perhaps more relevant — is his graduate school play, originally called Archie Loves Nathan, in which Archie became college roommates with a real-life monster, Nathan Leopold (of Leopold and Loeb infamy). Afterlife is drawn by Francesco Francavilla, known for his dramatically-lit, moody creations, notably in Detective Comics. This creative combo alone put Afterlife on several most anticipated comics lists; in fact, the first issue sold out in five hours.



While Afterlife marks a lot of firsts for Archie Comics — first horror book, first teen rating — it really is the latest in a chain of successful innovations that's kept Archie on top of the mass market heap, with 2 billion comics sold in several different languages.


Did I just hear a record scratch in the minds of legions of comics readers who find the only thing enduring about Archie Andrews is his eternal squareness? Feeling smug, are you? But consider: in hairstyles, clothes, technology (there will be blood texting), Archie isn't as static as you remember.


Yes, Archie Comics keeps its core titles pristine, but it's also kept up with the times, introducing the out-and-proud character Kevin Keller along with audience-expanding mashups and alternative storylines like Archie Gets Married and Afterlife with Archie.


Remember too, your younger self had different sensibilities. 60% of Archie readers are tween girls, average starting age: nine. Since I happen to know a 9-year-old girl, Lilah, who loves Archie, I asked her what gives. "It's fun to read when I have nothing to do. Jughead is funny and all he thinks about is eating. And I like dogs. So Hot Dog is my favorite."


Dear reader, you know what I had to do. Don't hate me, don't try this at home — and don't come after me, Crypt-Keeper! But I had to ask: What did she think of Afterlife? "I really, really liked it. It was a cliffhanger. I did have a nightmare about zombies but that's just cause I read it a second time at night and it was dark so it was more scary."


Which leads me to a last reason you need to read this book if an Archie horror title wasn't on your list. The kids are going find and consume it. Why not do it together?


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/18/236230146/world-war-r-new-comic-pits-archie-and-friends-against-the-undead?ft=1&f=1032
Related Topics: mlb   betrayal   national coffee day   remembering 9/11   JJ Cale  

Snowden: No classified documents taken to Russia

In this image made from video released by WikiLeaks on Friday, Oct. 11, 2013, former National Security Agency systems analyst Edward Snowden speaks during a presentation ceremony for the Sam Adams Award in Moscow, Russia. Snowden was awarded the Sam Adams Award, according to videos released by the organization WikiLeaks. The award ceremony was attended by three previous recipients. (AP Photo)







In this image made from video released by WikiLeaks on Friday, Oct. 11, 2013, former National Security Agency systems analyst Edward Snowden speaks during a presentation ceremony for the Sam Adams Award in Moscow, Russia. Snowden was awarded the Sam Adams Award, according to videos released by the organization WikiLeaks. The award ceremony was attended by three previous recipients. (AP Photo)







(AP) — Former National Security Agency systems analyst Edward Snowden says that he did not take any secret NSA documents to Russia and that intelligence officials in China as well as Russia could not get access to the documents he had obtained before leaving the United States.

In an interview with The New York Times, Snowden said he handed over all the documents he had obtained to journalists during his stay in Hong Kong. The newspaper posted its story on its website Thursday.

Snowden said he did not retain copies of the documents and did not take them to Russia "because it wouldn't serve the public interest," the Times reported. He said his familiarity with China's intelligence abilities allowed him to protect the documents from Chinese spies while he was in Hong Kong.

"There's a zero percent chance the Russians or Chinese have received any documents," he said.

Snowden's leaks of highly classified material have resulted in numerous news stories about U.S. surveillance activities at home and abroad and sparked debate about the legality of those activities and the privacy implications for average Americans.

The Times reported that in the interview, which it said took place over several days in the last week and involved encrypted online communications, Snowden asserted that he believed he was a whistle-blower who was acting in the nation's best interests by revealing information about the NSA's surveillance dragnet and huge collections of communications data.

Snowden said that he had helped U.S. national security by prompting a badly needed public debate about the scope of the intelligence effort. "The secret continuance of these programs represents a far greater danger than their disclosure," he said.

Snowden faces espionage charges in the U.S. On Aug. 1 he was granted asylum in Russia, which is allowing him to remain there for one year.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-17-US-NSA-Surveillance-Snowden/id-4f057cdb51194bd292a67bb704aa47ea
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Thursday, October 17, 2013

UK cost agency backs Medivation, Astellas prostate cancer pill


LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's healthcare cost watchdog NICE has recommended that a new prostate cancer pill from Medivation and Astellas should be used on the state health service.


The draft guidance is conditional on Xtandi being provided at an undisclosed discount to the list price of 2,734.67 pounds ($4,400) for 28 days supply, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) said on Friday.


Xtandi, known chemically as enzalutamide, is designed to treat advanced prostate cancer in patients who have previously received chemotherapy.


It is one of four new life-extending prostate cancer drugs that researchers from Britain's Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) have helped to develop in recent years. The others are Johnson & Johnson's Zytiga, Sanofi's Jevtana, and Xofigo from Algeta and Bayer.


Alan Ashworth, chief executive of the ICR, said these drugs offered hope for men after decades in which there had been no options once old-style hormone treatment stopped working.


"What we're seeing now is an unprecedented period of success for prostate cancer research," he said. "It truly is a golden age for prostate cancer drug discovery and development."


Zytiga is already recommended by NICE but Jevtana was rejected as not being cost-effective. The agency has yet to give its verdict on Xofigo, which is on sale in the United States but not yet launched in Europe.


($1 = 0.6278 British pounds)


(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; editing by David Evans)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uk-cost-agency-backs-medivation-astellas-prostate-cancer-230237668--sector.html
Related Topics: Manny Diaz   megan fox  

Ubisoft Won't Be Letting the Watch Dogs Out

Ubisoft has decided to hold back on releasing its Watch Dogs, and The Crew won't be seeing any action until sometime well into 2014 either. While that will take some festivity out of the holiday season for the company and disappointed gamers alike, it's not all bad. "Ubisoft will have a bigger installed base of next-generation consoles to aim for when these games do launch," noted gaming analyst P.J. McNealy.


Ubisoft -- Europe's largest video game publisher -- might have a less-than-merry holiday season. It announced Wednesday that two of its hotly anticipated titles, Watch Dogs and The Crew, would be delayed until sometime in 2014.


Shares fell on the news by as much as 32 percent -- the most since Ubisoft made its debut on the Paris exchange in 1992. Ubisoft has predicted an operating loss of 40 million euros to 70 million euros for the year ending in March.


The holiday period accounted for more than half the company's sales last year.


Tough Decisions


Watch Dogs and The Crew are now expected to debut sometime between March and September of next year.



"Our long-term goal is to win the next generation," said Ubisoft cofounder and CEO Yves Guillemot.


"The tough decisions we are taking today to fully realize the major potential of our new creations have an impact on our short-term performance. We are convinced that longer term, they will prove to be the right decisions both in terms of satisfaction for our fans and in terms of value creation for our shareholders," he explained.


"We are building franchises that will become perennial pillars of Ubisoft's financial performance," Guillemot added. "In a context of growing successes for mega-blockbusters, the additional time given to the development of our titles will allow them to fulfill their huge ambitions and thus offer players even more exceptional experiences."


Game Delayed, Not Over


These are not the only high-profile game launches to be postponed, but what makes the delay of Watch Dogs especially problematic is that it had been slated as a launch title for Sony's PlayStation 4 video game console. It was included in some prerelease bundle deals for next month's PS4 debut.


The delay could cause headaches not only for Ubisoft but also for Sony.


"Game delays, especially high-end console games, are unfortunately common," Piers Harding-Rolls, director and head of games for IHS Electronics and Media, told the E-Commerce Times.


"Much like big-budget movies with unwieldy crews and post production processes, the complexity of pulling games together and the number of staff involved in their development mean that some delays are inevitable," he said.


"Ubisoft will be disappointed to miss the launch period of the next generation of consoles, especially as this is often a time when consumers are more open and interested in entirely new games properties and gameplay," added Harding-Rolls. "It's also likely that Ubisoft will have additional costs to bear associated with these delayed games, included prepaid marketing costs and development time costs."


Console Transition


Though Ubisoft could easily recover from this setback, it might be a portent that the next-generation systems -- including Sony's PS4 -- could be more challenging for game developers than had been expected. It also could be that Ubisoft would rather endure a short-term delay than risk damaging a potential cash cow franchise.


"Console transitions are always challenging, and pushing out a launch window title at this point is not unusual but is unfortunate," said video game industry consultant P.J. McNealy of Digital World Research.


"Caution is the better path at this point, because you never want to ship a new intellectual property early in the cycle if it isn't fully baked," he told the E-Commerce Times. "Near-term, this is painful for Ubisoft, but not fatal."


There is one possible bright side to this. The delay ultimately could mean bigger sales, as launch titles might not have legs beyond the launch window.


"On a more positive note, Ubisoft will have a bigger installed base of next-generation consoles to aim for when these games do launch, which will help mitigate these additional costs," noted Harding-Rolls. "We expect next generation software on PS4 and Xbox One to sell for a higher sales price than current generation software, so that will likely soften the blow."


Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/79207.html
Tags: Nexus 5   christopher columbus   elizabeth smart   CJ Spiller   Justin Timberlake Vma  

The Hidden Easter Eggs That Link Star Wars and Indiana Jones

The Hidden Easter Eggs That Link  Star Wars and Indiana Jones

From a young age I was introduced to what are still two of my favourite movie franchises of all time – Star Wars and Indiana Jones. I suppose it was inevitable, really. With parents who named me after a Doctor Who character, I would expect them to continue being awesome as I grew up.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-hidden-easter-eggs-which-link-star-wars-and-indian-1446924666
Category: Blacklist   What Time Does Ios 7 Come Out   Tom Harmon   Allison Micheletti   tommy morrison  

Halloween candy spooks aging digestive systems! Research in fruit flies helps explain why

Halloween candy spooks aging digestive systems! Research in fruit flies helps explain why


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Public release date: 15-Oct-2013
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Contact: Kris Rebillot
krebillot@buckinstitute.org
415-209-2080
Buck Institute for Age Research





Have you ever wondered why young children can eat bags of Halloween candy and feel fine the next day compared to adults who experience all sorts of agony following the same junk food binge? Evolution and a gene called Foxo may be to blame. Working in fruit flies, scientists at the Buck Institute have identified a mechanism that helps the flies adapt to changes in diet when they're young; they've discovered that same mechanism gets misregulated as the flies age, disrupting metabolic homeostasis, or balance.


In a study appearing in Cell Reports, researchers focus on the function of the Foxo gene in the intestines of fruit flies. Foxo is widely expressed throughout the body (both in flies and in humans), particularly in muscle, the liver and pancreas and can regulate many aspects of metabolism in response to insulin signaling. Lead author Jason Karpac, PhD, Assistant Research Professor at the Buck, says when young animals experience a change in diet, insulin signaling gets repressed, which turns on Foxo. "In normal young animals Foxo turns on and off quite easily, allowing for a seamless adjustment to changes in diet," said Karpac. "The process is evolutionarily conserved, it protects young animals and helps guarantee their survival," he said.


But Karpac says as the animals age, Foxo stops responding to insulin signaling (not a good thing for non-youngsters who crave that Halloween candy). "In the flies Foxo gets chronically turned on, which disrupts lipid metabolism. The process reflects the development of a general inflammatory condition in the aging gut."


"It has been proposed that our modern high-sugar/high fat diets can lead to misregulation of evolutionarily conserved dietary responses," said Buck Institute faculty Heinrich Jasper, PhD, lead scientist on the study. "That may be the case. Metabolism is a very complex process -- lots of things can go wrong which increases stress in the animals." Jasper says age-related loss of metabolic balance is a risk factor for many human pathologies. The goal is to identify age-related changes in metabolic pathways with the hope of being able to intervene. "Our aim is to develop treatments that would preserve well-functioning metabolism as part of healthy aging something that would likely not ever include indulging in candy binges."


###


Other contributors to the study include Benoit Biteau, Department of Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY. The work was supported by the National Institute on Aging (NIH RO1 AG028127) and American Federation of Age Research and the Ellison Medical Foundation.



Citation: "Misregulation of an Adaptive Metabolic Response Contributes to the Age-Related Disruption of Lipid Homeostatis in Drosophila" Cell Reports, epub, September 12, 2013.



About the Buck Institute for Research on Aging

The Buck Institute is the U.S.'s first independent research organization devoted to Geroscience focused on the connection between normal aging and chronic disease. Based in Novato, CA, The Buck is dedicated to extending "Healthspan", the healthy years of human life and does so utilizing a unique interdisciplinary approach involving laboratories studying the mechanisms of aging and those focused on specific diseases. Buck scientists strive to discover new ways of detecting, preventing and treating age-related diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, cancer, cardiovascular disease, macular degeneration, osteoporosis, diabetes and stroke. In their collaborative research, they are supported by the most recent developments in genomics, proteomics, bioinformatics and stem cell technologies. For more information: http://www.thebuck.org




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Halloween candy spooks aging digestive systems! Research in fruit flies helps explain why


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 15-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Kris Rebillot
krebillot@buckinstitute.org
415-209-2080
Buck Institute for Age Research





Have you ever wondered why young children can eat bags of Halloween candy and feel fine the next day compared to adults who experience all sorts of agony following the same junk food binge? Evolution and a gene called Foxo may be to blame. Working in fruit flies, scientists at the Buck Institute have identified a mechanism that helps the flies adapt to changes in diet when they're young; they've discovered that same mechanism gets misregulated as the flies age, disrupting metabolic homeostasis, or balance.


In a study appearing in Cell Reports, researchers focus on the function of the Foxo gene in the intestines of fruit flies. Foxo is widely expressed throughout the body (both in flies and in humans), particularly in muscle, the liver and pancreas and can regulate many aspects of metabolism in response to insulin signaling. Lead author Jason Karpac, PhD, Assistant Research Professor at the Buck, says when young animals experience a change in diet, insulin signaling gets repressed, which turns on Foxo. "In normal young animals Foxo turns on and off quite easily, allowing for a seamless adjustment to changes in diet," said Karpac. "The process is evolutionarily conserved, it protects young animals and helps guarantee their survival," he said.


But Karpac says as the animals age, Foxo stops responding to insulin signaling (not a good thing for non-youngsters who crave that Halloween candy). "In the flies Foxo gets chronically turned on, which disrupts lipid metabolism. The process reflects the development of a general inflammatory condition in the aging gut."


"It has been proposed that our modern high-sugar/high fat diets can lead to misregulation of evolutionarily conserved dietary responses," said Buck Institute faculty Heinrich Jasper, PhD, lead scientist on the study. "That may be the case. Metabolism is a very complex process -- lots of things can go wrong which increases stress in the animals." Jasper says age-related loss of metabolic balance is a risk factor for many human pathologies. The goal is to identify age-related changes in metabolic pathways with the hope of being able to intervene. "Our aim is to develop treatments that would preserve well-functioning metabolism as part of healthy aging something that would likely not ever include indulging in candy binges."


###


Other contributors to the study include Benoit Biteau, Department of Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY. The work was supported by the National Institute on Aging (NIH RO1 AG028127) and American Federation of Age Research and the Ellison Medical Foundation.



Citation: "Misregulation of an Adaptive Metabolic Response Contributes to the Age-Related Disruption of Lipid Homeostatis in Drosophila" Cell Reports, epub, September 12, 2013.



About the Buck Institute for Research on Aging

The Buck Institute is the U.S.'s first independent research organization devoted to Geroscience focused on the connection between normal aging and chronic disease. Based in Novato, CA, The Buck is dedicated to extending "Healthspan", the healthy years of human life and does so utilizing a unique interdisciplinary approach involving laboratories studying the mechanisms of aging and those focused on specific diseases. Buck scientists strive to discover new ways of detecting, preventing and treating age-related diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, cancer, cardiovascular disease, macular degeneration, osteoporosis, diabetes and stroke. In their collaborative research, they are supported by the most recent developments in genomics, proteomics, bioinformatics and stem cell technologies. For more information: http://www.thebuck.org




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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/bifa-hcs101413.php
Category: julianne hough   luke bryan   Tami Erin   usc football   Zayn Malik  

Police: Worker set off LAX dry ice bombs as prank

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A baggage handler arrested after dry ice bombs exploded at Los Angeles International Airport planted the devices as a prank, police said Wednesday.


The motive was disclosed a day after the arrest of Dicarlo Bennett, a 28-year-old employee for the ground handling company Servisair.


"I think we can safely say he is not a terrorist or an organized crime boss. He did this for his own amusement," said Los Angeles police Deputy Chief Michael Downing, who heads the department's counter-terrorism and special operations bureau.


No one was hurt on Sunday when two plastic bottles packed with dry ice exploded in an employee bathroom and on the airport's tarmac. An unexploded device was found Monday night.


As a result of the incident, airport officials plan to meet with law enforcement authorities to examine potential security enhancements at the nation's second-busiest airport.


The meeting also will explore the handling and transport of dry ice and other hazardous materials and possible improvements to those procedures.


Arif Alikhan, deputy executive director for Homeland Security and Law Enforcement at Los Angeles World Airports, said such meetings are routine after problems.


"We'll look at all layers of security existing at the airport, including technology, physical infrastructure, the partnership of tenants, awareness of employees to potential hazardous items like dry ice," Alikhan said.


Workers at the airport must pass a criminal background check before they can get a security badge for access to restricted areas.


On Tuesday, police arrested Bennett, who was booked for possession of a destructive device near an aircraft and held on $1 million bail.


It was not immediately clear whether Bennett had a lawyer. A message left on a phone number listed at an address for Bennett was not returned.


Despite the arrest, travelers saw stepped-up security patrols at all terminals as well as the airfield, Los Angeles Airport Police spokeswoman Belinda Nettles said.


Dry ice is routinely used by aircraft catering companies and restaurants to keep perishable food safe.


Bennett took dry ice from a plane and placed a loaded bottle in an employee bathroom, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation who wasn't authorized to speak publicly and asked to remain anonymous.


The commotion caused by the explosion delayed several flights. Remnants of another device were found the same night on a tarmac outside the main international terminal.


Police had pursued a theory that the bombs were placed by a disgruntled employee due to a labor dispute.


Servisair said in an emailed statement that it had no comment beyond confirming that Bennett was an employee of Servisair at the time of incident.


The bombs were made by putting dry ice in 20-ounce plastic bottles. When a bottle is capped, pressure builds up due to a chemical reaction and can cause an explosion.


The LAX explosions recalled a May incident at Disneyland, in which police said an employee placed dry ice-packed bottles in a food cart and trash can. Both exploded; no one was injured.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-worker-set-off-lax-dry-ice-bombs-223435169.html
Category: jim parsons   lesean mccoy   Nothing Was The Same   bachelorette   regions  

Firas Zahabi: Georges St-Pierre is not planning on retirement any time soon


Is Georges St-Pierre planning on retiring after his UFC 167 bout with Johny Hendricks?


Not so fast, says his trainer.


Firas Zahabi was quoted by the Canadian French language outlet TVA Sports last week as hinting the end of the road might be near for the UFC's longtime welterweight champion. In a translated quote, the head of Montreal's Tri Star gym said "George told me if the occasion should retire after this fight. If he still has the motivation for another training camp, it will continue. Otherwise, he will take his retirement."


But according to Ariel Helwani on Wednesday's edition of UFC Tonight, Zahabi says his words were taken out of context.


Zahabi said that St-Pierre, who has been champion since April, 2008, has always maintained that when he hits the point that he loses his full motivation in his training camps, he will retire from the sport.


But Zahabi said that such is not the case now, as St-Pierre prepares to meet Hendricks on Nov. 16 in Las Vegas. While St-Pierre's previous two training camps, for title defenses against Carlos Condit and Nick Diaz, weren't so great because he was coming off a knee injury, the Hendricks camp has been his best in a long time.


"GSP has always that said if he loses the drive to really go through with a great training camp and push himself, then he will retire," Zahabi said through Helwani. "GSP's camp has been his best in years, last two not so great, because he was so rusty because of the knee injury."


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/16/4846510/firas-zahabi-georges-st-pierre-is-not-planning-on-retirement-any-time
Related Topics: adrian peterson   furlough   us open   Dick Van Dyke   Jake Pavelka  

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Daily Roundup: GoPro Hero3+ review, gdgt's best deals, Android KitKat tease and more!


Daily Roundup: GoPro Hero3+ review, gdgt's best deals, Android KitKat tease and more!


You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours -- all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.





GoPro Hero3+ review


Though the Hero3+ is more of an update than a complete overhaul, we're still excited over the improved optics, new "SuperView" mode, improved battery life and slimmer casing. And with the same price as last year's model, it's pretty much a no-brainer for people looking to buy their first action cam.




DNP Daily Roundup TKTKTK


Nestle hints at Android 4.4 KitKat


Google is due for both new hardware and software on October 29th -- the anniversary for both Android 4.2 and the Nexus 4. Follow the link to experience Nestle's musical (and chocolate-covered) tease leading up to Google's next launch event.





gdgt's best deals for October 16th


Today's top deals include gear that could pass for back-to-school necessities -- maybe. The popular and uber-portable 11-inch MacBook Air (mid-2012) is currently cruising at low-priced altitudes, and budding filmmakers or game coders could easily justify buying Samsung's 46-inch F8000 series LED TV for "research" at its current price point. If you need to back up some data, Seagate's well-regarded Backup Plus Portable 1TB is available for a discount.





Google Glass firmware hints at new features


According to an APK teardown from Android Police earlier today, Google Glass wearers may be in for a handful of new commands and features. Click on through to browse the source link.





Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/16/gopro-hero3-android-kitkat-gdgt-deals/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Iran: More Nuclear Talks 'In A Few Weeks'





Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. More talks "in a few weeks," he says.



Jason DeCrow/AP


Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. More talks "in a few weeks," he says.


Jason DeCrow/AP


Iran is planning a fresh round of talks on its nuclear program "in a few weeks" after a generally positive first round of multiparty meetings in Geneva aimed at defusing tensions with the West.


Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, commenting on his Facebook page, says the next meeting with the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany would also be held in Geneva.


Reuters, quoting a western diplomat, says the talks are set to resume in Geneva for two days beginning Nov. 7.


On Tuesday, Tehran presented a plan to the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany to end the confrontation over its nuclear program, which it has always insisted is for peaceful purposes.


No details of that plan were released, but as The Associated Press reports:




"[Comments] from Western officials meeting with Iranian negotiators indicated interest in the proposal, described by Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi as designed to allow Iran to leave the 'dark' path of international isolation.


Previous rounds have often been fitful and sporadic, reflecting the deadlock between the two sides. Zarif's Facebook comments that negotiations will resume 'in a few weeks' strengthened expectations that some progress was being made. He said the follow-up will also be held in Geneva, the venue for the ongoing talks."




The election of moderate President Hassan Rouhani four months ago has opened the door to negotiations over Iran's nuclear program, which many Western analysts believe is aimed at acquiring a bomb.


Update At 12:08 p.m. ET. Zarif: 'Fruitful' Discussions


Speaking in Geneva, Zarif says Iran held 'fruitful' nuclear discussions and hopes for a "new phase" in relations with the West, Reuters reports. He says he hopes world powers will be prepared to try to solve the impasse.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/16/235353373/iran-more-nuclear-talks-in-a-few-weeks?ft=1&f=1009
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I'm singing in the rainforest

I'm singing in the rainforest


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
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Contact: Dr. Henrik Brumm
brumm@orn.mpg.de
49-815-793-2355
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft



Researchers find striking similarities between bird song and human music



This news release is available in German.


The origin of human music has long been the subject of intense discussion between philosophers, cultural scientists and naturalists. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen, Germany and Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, US, have now found striking parallels between our music and the song of a small brown bird living in the Amazon region. The Musician Wren favors consonant over dissonant intervals, something that has rarely been observed in other animal species before. This bird's musicality goes even further: it prefers to sing perfect consonances (octaves, perfect fifths, and perfect fourths) over imperfect consonances leading to some passages which may sound to human listeners as if they are structured around a tonal center.


The Musician Wren (Cyphorhynus arada) is aptly-named, because these birds use the same intervals in their songs that are heard as consonant in many human cultures. This is what composer and musicologist Emily Doolittle and the biologist Henrik Brumm found out in their zoomusicological study. Consonant intervals are perceived to fit well together. They sound calm and stable, and are the basis for keys in Western Music. It is because Musician Wrens preferentially produce successive perfect octaves, fifths, and fourths that their songs sound musical to human listeners.

In fact the researchers found passages in the songs of the Musician Wrens with striking similarity to passages of e.g. the composers Bach and Haydn.


"However, this does not mean that the musician wren is singing in a key the way a human musician might. Rather, the bird's preference for consonances leads to occasional conjunctions of pitches which sound to human listeners like they are drawn from the same scale", says Emily Doolittle.


In 2011, Emily Doolittle was composer-in-residence at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen, Germany, where she collaborated with ornithologist Henrik Brumm in researching song of the musician wren, gathered birdsongs for future musical use, and presented a concert of her birdsong-related works, performed by members of the Bavarian State Opera.


The now published study reveals that the song of the "Uirapuru" (the Portuguese name for the Musician Wren) is often a part of Brazilian music. The composer Heitor Villa-Lobos wrote a symphonic poem in 1917 called "Uirapuru". Other closely related birds did not receive such an honor: although they have pleasant songs, they lack the harmonic intervals of the musician wrens. Doolittle and Brumm tested 91 human listeners by asking them to compare successions of intervals taken from the musician wrens' songs with computer-generated songs in which the contours and durations remained the same but the intervals were slightly altered. The results were clear: human listeners considered the birds' interval choices to be more "musical".


"Our findings explain why this bird species plays such a prominent role in mythology and art. However, it does not mean that birdsong in general is constructed like human music there are around 4000 different song bird species and each has its own way of singing. Some are not very musical at all," says Henrik Brumm, research group leader in Seewiesen.


It remains mysterious whether and how musician wrens perceive musical intervals and how they think about structuring their songs, though this would be an excellent subject for further study. The perception of intervals and other aspects of human music by non-human animals are of considerable relevance with regards to the origin of human music.


###


Original work:

Emily Doolittle & Henrik Brumm: O Canto do Uirapuru: Consonant intervals and patterns in the song of the musician wren. Journal of Interdisciplinary Music Studies. Published online October 15th, 2013 (Open Access, pdf available under http://www.musicstudies.org/)




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I'm singing in the rainforest


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 16-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Dr. Henrik Brumm
brumm@orn.mpg.de
49-815-793-2355
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft



Researchers find striking similarities between bird song and human music



This news release is available in German.


The origin of human music has long been the subject of intense discussion between philosophers, cultural scientists and naturalists. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen, Germany and Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, US, have now found striking parallels between our music and the song of a small brown bird living in the Amazon region. The Musician Wren favors consonant over dissonant intervals, something that has rarely been observed in other animal species before. This bird's musicality goes even further: it prefers to sing perfect consonances (octaves, perfect fifths, and perfect fourths) over imperfect consonances leading to some passages which may sound to human listeners as if they are structured around a tonal center.


The Musician Wren (Cyphorhynus arada) is aptly-named, because these birds use the same intervals in their songs that are heard as consonant in many human cultures. This is what composer and musicologist Emily Doolittle and the biologist Henrik Brumm found out in their zoomusicological study. Consonant intervals are perceived to fit well together. They sound calm and stable, and are the basis for keys in Western Music. It is because Musician Wrens preferentially produce successive perfect octaves, fifths, and fourths that their songs sound musical to human listeners.

In fact the researchers found passages in the songs of the Musician Wrens with striking similarity to passages of e.g. the composers Bach and Haydn.


"However, this does not mean that the musician wren is singing in a key the way a human musician might. Rather, the bird's preference for consonances leads to occasional conjunctions of pitches which sound to human listeners like they are drawn from the same scale", says Emily Doolittle.


In 2011, Emily Doolittle was composer-in-residence at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen, Germany, where she collaborated with ornithologist Henrik Brumm in researching song of the musician wren, gathered birdsongs for future musical use, and presented a concert of her birdsong-related works, performed by members of the Bavarian State Opera.


The now published study reveals that the song of the "Uirapuru" (the Portuguese name for the Musician Wren) is often a part of Brazilian music. The composer Heitor Villa-Lobos wrote a symphonic poem in 1917 called "Uirapuru". Other closely related birds did not receive such an honor: although they have pleasant songs, they lack the harmonic intervals of the musician wrens. Doolittle and Brumm tested 91 human listeners by asking them to compare successions of intervals taken from the musician wrens' songs with computer-generated songs in which the contours and durations remained the same but the intervals were slightly altered. The results were clear: human listeners considered the birds' interval choices to be more "musical".


"Our findings explain why this bird species plays such a prominent role in mythology and art. However, it does not mean that birdsong in general is constructed like human music there are around 4000 different song bird species and each has its own way of singing. Some are not very musical at all," says Henrik Brumm, research group leader in Seewiesen.


It remains mysterious whether and how musician wrens perceive musical intervals and how they think about structuring their songs, though this would be an excellent subject for further study. The perception of intervals and other aspects of human music by non-human animals are of considerable relevance with regards to the origin of human music.


###


Original work:

Emily Doolittle & Henrik Brumm: O Canto do Uirapuru: Consonant intervals and patterns in the song of the musician wren. Journal of Interdisciplinary Music Studies. Published online October 15th, 2013 (Open Access, pdf available under http://www.musicstudies.org/)




[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

 


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/m-isi101613.php
Category: Common App   Desiree And Chris  

O2 and HTC partner to give away 18ct gold HTC One

Gold HTC One

O2 HTC One customers who buy between Oct. 17 and 20 will be eligible to win

Remember that 18 carat gold-plated HTC One produced to celebrate the 18th MOBO awards — of which there are just five in existence? Well, HTC UK has partnered with British carrier O2 to give the £2,750-value handset away to one lucky customer. In a post on its official promotional site, HTC reveals that the blinged-out smartphone will be given away to one lucky customer who buys the HTC One from O2 between Oct. 17 and Oct. 20. One of the remaining four will be given away to the winner of the MOBO for best newcomer on Oct. 19.

As we saw during our time with the gold HTC One at a recent event in London, this is a really, really gold HTC One. But we suppose at least the winner will have their other HTC One for situations that demand a less lustrous smartphone.

More: Hands-on with the real gold HTC One

Source: HTC


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/JvecRzWhxWM/story01.htm
Category: jennette mccurdy   fox sports   tracy mcgrady   Jeff Tuel   Rafael Caro Quintero  

Okkervil River: Tiny Desk Concert


At first blush, Okkervil River is obviously a good rock 'n' roll band, but listen closely — especially to its lyrics — and you'll hear a great rock 'n' roll band. The group has been making sharp, thoughtful music since the late '90s, with the first of its seven albums coming out a dozen years ago.


The songs in this Tiny Desk Concert are from The Silver Gymnasium, a record inspired by the childhood of 37-year-old singer-songwriter Will Sheff; he grew up a bespectacled, crooked-toothed redhead in the small New Hampshire town of Meriden. His lyrics are drenched in specific memories, pop-culture references and youthful insecurity. Look at these lines from "Down Down the Deep River":



Tell me 'bout the greatest show or the greatest movie you know


Or the greatest song that you taped from off the radio


Play it again and again — it cuts off at the ending, though


Tell me I'm always gonna be your best friend


Now you said it one time — why don't you say it again?



The stories pop a bit more in this acoustic set-up for Okkervil River, but they rock plenty hard in concert and on their albums. If you've missed the past dozen years of this band, start here and then work your way back through its catalog. The Stage Names is my favorite, but nothing disappoints.


Set List

  • "On A Balcony"

  • "Pink Slips"

  • "Down Down The Deep River"

Credits

Producers: Bob Boilen, Denise DeBelius; Audio Engineer: Kevin Wait; Videographers: Denise DeBelius, Becky Harlan, Abbey Oldham; photo by Meredith Rizzo/NPR


Source: http://www.npr.org/event/music/232122323/okkervil-river-tiny-desk-concert?ft=1&f=1110
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Leon Panetta's Problem With Obama


WASHINGTON -- Leon Panetta served in Washington with nine presidents, starting with Lyndon Johnson. He has been a member of Congress, Office of Management and Budget director, White House chief of staff, director of Central Intelligence and secretary of defense -- the last two under President Obama. He is a man who knows Washington, and knows how to choose his words. So Panetta's implicit rebuke of the president's hands-off approach to the budget crisis at a breakfast Monday was striking.


Indeed, implicit may be an understatement. Asked repeatedly whether he was being correctly understood as critical of President Obama, Panetta was careful to assert that "I don't want to put it all on the president" and that there is "enough blame to go around." But he did not back down.



"It's hard to watch what's going on here," Panetta said at the start of the session, sponsored by The Wall Street Journal. He noted that there are two ways of governing: by leadership or by crisis. "This town has been governing by crisis after crisis after crisis," he said.


Which raised the obvious question: Was he saying something about the president's leadership?


Several observations ensued. "This town has gotten a lot meaner in the last few years." Relationships have deteriorated. Redistricting into safe seats hasn't helped. Neither has the explosion of money in campaigns, or the elimination of earmarks. (Negotiating one Bill Clinton budget, "I think I sold about six bridges to get there," Panetta recalled.)


Then, to Obama. "This president -- he's extremely bright, he's extremely able, he's somebody who I think certainly understands the issues, asks the right questions and I think has the right instincts about what needs to be done for the country."


Next came the "but" -- without a name but with a clear message. "You have to engage in the process. This is a town where it's not enough to feel you've got the right answer. You've got to roll up your sleeves ... listening to other people, figuring out what they need ... that's what governing is all about."


Bloomberg's Al Hunt asked Panetta how Clinton would have handled the current situation differently. "We were negotiating up to the last minute in the Oval Office" before the 1995 shutdown, recalled Panetta, then Clinton's chief of staff. "Some of us were nervous that Bill Clinton was bending over backwards to try to see if he could get a deal done."


Panetta's image of being clustered in the Oval Office with all the key players -- Bob Dole, Newt Gingrich, Dick Armey, Dick Gephardt, Tom Daschle, plus Clinton and Vice President Gore -- offered a vivid contrast to the current state of play, with the talks collapsed between White House and House Speaker John Boehner, and with the 11th-hour action shifted to the Senate leaders, Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell.


To some extent, the reporters in the room seemed more forgiving of the circumstances in which the president finds himself. Jackie Calmes of The New York Times noted that the Panetta-envisioned budget deal was illusory because Republicans were insistent that there be no new tax revenue. Doyle McManus of the Los Angeles Times observed that the White House would argue that its previous efforts at schmoozing and deal-making had gone nowhere.


"Just because you've engaged in some set of negotiations and they haven't gone anywhere, for one reason or another there's been a breakdown, is no reason to walk away from the table," Panetta said. "In this town, you've got to stay with it. You've got to stay at it."


The solution, Panetta added, is not "some razzle-dazzle super-committee or group of muckety-mucks from the outside world. That hasn't worked. They are going to have to do it in the context of the conference of the budget." Locked in a room, if need be, until differences are resolved, as happened with the 1990 budget summit at Andrews Air Force Base. "I spent three months at Andrews Air Force Base going through this crap," Panetta recalled.


As to the notion any proposal associated with Obama was inherently toxic to Republicans, Panetta said, "If the president, for whatever reason, feels he can't do it because the Republicans don't want to confront him, then he ought to be willing to delegate that responsibility to someone who can do it."


I've got a stellar candidate in mind. His name is Leon Panetta. He seems awfully happy back home in Carmel Valley, California. But he also remembers the way to Andrews -- and what it takes to get things done once you arrive. 


Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2013/10/15/the_panetta_formula_120329.html
Related Topics: julianne hough   9news   Delbert Belton   Hunter Hayes   Karen Black  

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Two girls arrested in Florida online bullying death: report


(Reuters) - Two girls, ages 12 and 14, have been charged with felony aggravated stalking in connection with the suicide of a 12-year-old Florida girl who was bullied online, the Tampa Tribune reported on Tuesday.


The Polk County Sheriff's Office said it would release details of the arrests at a news conference at 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT) on Tuesday.


Investigators said Rebecca Ann Sedwick of Lakeland, Florida, became despondent after being bullied for months by a group of girls who posted online messages telling her "You should die," and "Why don't you go kill yourself?"


On September 9, Sedwick climbed a tower at an abandoned cement plant and jumped to her death.


(Reporting by Jane Sutton; Editing by Alden Bentley)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/two-girls-arrested-florida-online-bullying-death-report-134303934.html
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Removing My Children From the Internet

Removing My Children From the Internet

About a week ago I began deleting all photos and videos of my children from the Internet. This is proving to be no easy task. Like many parents, I’ve excitedly shared virtually every step, misstep and milestone that myself and my children have muddled our way through.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/0dM43gqmuC0/removing-my-children-from-the-internet-1444922696
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Dad defends daughter charged in Fla. bullying case

WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) — A central Florida man says allegations that his 14-year-old daughter bullied a 12-year-old girl who killed herself are not true.


Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said Tuesday authorities arrested the 14-year-old girl after she admitted online over the weekend that she had harassed Rebecca Sedwick.


A man who answered the phone at the 14-year-old's Lakeland home identified himself as her father. He told The Associated Press that his daughter was "a good girl" and he was "100 percent sure that whatever they're saying about my daughter is not true."


A 12-year-old girl was also arrested in the case. A message left at her Lakeland home was not immediately returned.


Rebecca climbed at tower at an abandoned concrete plant Sept. 9 and hurled herself to her death.


AP generally doesn't identify juveniles charged with crimes.


THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.


Two girls were arrested in a Florida bullying case after one of them admitted online over the weekend that she harassed a 12-year-old girl killed herself last month, a sheriff said Tuesday.


Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said they arrested a 14-year-old girl because they were worried she would continue cyberbullying other girls. The girl is accused of bullying 12-year-old Rebecca Sedwick, who climbed at tower at an abandoned concrete plant Sept. 9 and hurled herself to her death.


Judd said arrested the 14-year-old girl after she posted online Saturday that she bullied Rebecca and she didn't care.


"We decided that we can't leave her out there. Who else is she going to torment, who else is she going to harass?" Judd said.


Police also arrested a 12-year-old girl who is accused of bullying Rebecca. Both have been charged with felony aggravated stalking.


The sheriff's office identified the two girls, but The Associated Press generally does not name juveniles charged with crimes.


Judd said the bullying began after the 14-year-old girl started dating a boy that Rebecca had been seeing.


She "didn't like that and began to harass and ultimately torment Rebecca," Judd said.


The 12-year-old girl was Rebecca's former best friend, but Judd said the 14-year-old girl turned her against Rebecca. Other girls also stopped being friends with her in fear of being bullied, the sheriff said.


Authorities have said Rebecca was "terrorized" by as many as 15 girls who ganged up on her and picked on her for months through online message boards and texts.


Witnesses told investigators the 14-year-old girl told Rebecca "to drink bleach and die" and said she should kill herself.


Judd said neither girl's parents wanted to bring their daughters to the sheriff's office, so detectives went to their homes and arrested them.


Judd said the 14-year-old was "very cold, had no emotion at all upon her arrest."


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dad-defends-daughter-charged-fla-bullying-case-162122900.html
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TV Ratings: Sunday Night Football Rises Against MLB Postseason Competition



Averaging a 7.3 rating among adults 18-49 and 19.6 million viewers, Sunday Night Football topped all telecasts in Fast National returns. The scores, which will see further improvement when final ratings arrive, are massive 28 percent improvement from last week's initial numbers. The three half-hour installments of Football Night in America averaged a 1.9, 3.2 and 5.8 adults rating, giving NBC an early nightly average of a 6.0 rating with adults 18-49 and 16 million viewers.



PHOTOS: Hollywood's Connections to the NFL


Sports coverage served Fox well, with NFL overrun surging at 7 p.m. (8.0 adults), thanks to the Patriots' nail-biting win over the Saints. A special broadcast of the ALCS championship series, also subject to adjustments, averaged a 2.4 rating with adults 18-49 -- up from the 1.3 Fast National rating for last year's comparable game. Fox averaged a 4.1 rating with adults 18-49 and 12.7 million viewers.


Without the benefit of NFL overrun this week, 60 Minutes (1.5 adults) dropped 61 percent from the previous week. The Amazing Race (1.8 adults), The Good Wife (1.2 adults) and The Mentalist (1.3 adults) all hit series lows in early returns, falling a respective six-, four- and two-tenths of a point. CBS took a 1.5 adults rating for the night and 9.1 million viewers.


ABC also saw lows in the face of twice the sports competition. America's Funniest Home Videos (1.1 adults) returned four-tenths of a point down from last year's opener for its lowest premiere to date. Once Upon a Time (2.3 adults) and Revenge (1.7 adults) were both at fall lows, dropping a respective three- and two-tenths of a point. Betrayal (0.9 adults) fell another two-tenths for a series low. ABC averaged a 1.5 rating with adults 18-49 and 5.4 million viewers.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/live_feed/~3/lG0Slnj_5hU/story01.htm
Category: ariana grande   elvis presley  

Michael Waltrip Racing cutting to 2 full teams

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — Michael Waltrip Racing will run only two full-time cars next season because of the loss of sponsor NAPA, part of the fallout from its attempts to manipulate a race to get Martin Truex Jr. into the Chase.


Truex, crew chief Chad Johnston and 15 percent of the workforce were notified Monday they are free to negotiate with other teams. Team co-owner Rob Kauffman said the cuts were across the organization and not limited to Truex's team.


The car Truex drives will be repurposed into a research and development team next season. It will run a partial schedule beginning with the Daytona 500 with team co-owner Michael Waltrip behind the wheel depending on sponsorship, Waltrip said.


"Today was about doing what we had to do, not what we wanted to do," Kauffman said. "It was important to let those whose jobs were affected know as early as possible, and a majority of those will remain with MWR through the end of the season."


Truex has been talking to Furniture Row Racing about the seat being vacated by Kurt Busch. MWR is undecided if it will use Truex's No. 56 on the third car next season, and how many races the car enters will be based on sponsorship.


Also, Ty Norris' title position will change from general manager of MWR to executive director for business development. Norris has been on indefinite suspension from NASCAR for his role in the Richmond scandal.


"He will no longer be involved in competition and no longer be a spotter, and will focus strictly on the commercial side of the business," Kauffman said. "He's good at that and that's the skill set that's most helpful for the company. We have other folks on the competition side."


The meetings between Kauffman and Waltrip and their employees Monday were interrupted when driver Brian Vickers informed the owners that a blood clot had been found in his right calf. He was placed on blood-thinning medication that will prevent him from finishing the season in the No. 55 Toyota.


The team had previously planned to use co-owner Waltrip in this week's race at Talladega, and said it will decide later on its driver for the remaining four races.


Vickers was scheduled to participate in a Monday test at Charlotte Motor Speedway, but MWR had Brett Moffitt ready to drive.


It made for a dizzying and difficult day for MWR, which has been fighting for its survival since the Sept. 7 race at Richmond.


"We are taking the challenges we are faced with and trying to use them as a way to get better, and when you have to let some folks go and change direction, that upsets the apple cart and you feel for those folks," Waltrip said. "And then when Brian walks in this morning and tells you he has a health issue and the doctors won't let him race a car, I'm a race car driver and I just can't imagine a man at the prime of his career having to be faced with those challenges.


"So I think it's important to never, ever get into 'Why me?' That's not a very professional or positive way to look at things. I just like to use at is motivation to get better."


MWR went into Richmond with driver Clint Bowyer ranked second in the Sprint Cup standings and Truex on the bubble of making the 12-driver Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. But in the closing laps, as it became apparent Ryan Newman was going to snag the final spot in the Chase field, MWR schemed to get Truex the final berth.


It began when Bowyer deliberately spun to bring out a caution, setting in motion a chain of events that led to a widespread NASCAR investigation.


NASCAR fined MWR $300,000, suspended Norris indefinitely and replaced Truex in the Chase field with Newman, who was headed to the race win that would have given him the Chase berth before Bowyer's spin.


In punishing MWR, NASCAR ruled that the only thing it could prove was that Norris intentionally called Vickers down pit road in the closing laps to adjust the finish.


NAPA, a longtime partner of Waltrip's, then said it was pulling its multimillion-dollar sponsorship of Truex's team with two years remaining on its contract because it "believes in fair play and does not condone actions such as those that led to the penalties assessed by NASCAR."


As part of the changes announced Monday, MWR said executive vice president of competition Scott Miller will continue as crew chief of the No. 55 team into the 2014 season. He'd been interim crew chief since Rodney Childers was taken off the pit stand in August when he said he was moving to Stewart-Haas Racing next season.


Kauffman, who had been in Europe during the Richmond race and remained there for the two races that followed, returned after Bowyer sponsor 5-Hour Energy said it would return to the team in 2014. Kauffman temporarily relocated to North Carolina and began a review of MWR, which set in motion the organizational changes announced Monday.


"If you lose a third of a third of your revenue, you are going to have to reorganize your business and that's what we've done," Kauffman said. "What we are trying to focus on is using this opportunity to not only survive, but use this reorganization to make us better. We made a mistake, we paid a heavy price and we are adjusting to a new reality."


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/michael-waltrip-racing-cutting-2-full-teams-182759365--spt.html
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